How Many Hours a Day Should You Homeschool in Montana? (2026)
Montana requires roughly 900 instructional hours per year. For most families that translates to 4–7 hours per day (typical 5h) of focused instruction across about 180 days a year.
Most Montana homeschool families spend 5 hours a day on focused instruction (range: 4–7h depending on grade level), across ~180 school days. Time outside those hours — reading, projects, life skills — also counts toward learning, but only direct instruction counts toward state hour requirements where they exist.
Why daily hours feel so different from the public-school day
Homeschool instruction is one-on-one or small-group, which means a focused 30 minutes can cover what a 50-minute classroom period accomplishes. Research from the National Home Education Research Institute and the Cardus Education Survey consistently finds that homeschool families spend 3 to 5 hours of direct daily instruction and still match or exceed grade-level outcomes. Counting transitions, lunch, recess, and lining up, a brick-and-mortar schedule contains far less actual instructional time than the bell schedule suggests.
If your child is engaged and working, you are very likely doing enough. The most common mistake new Montana homeschool parents make is replicating a 7-hour schedule and burning out within weeks.
Suggested daily hours by age (Montana)
- Pre-K to K (ages 4–5): 1–1.5 hours of structured instruction, the rest play-based.
- 1st–3rd grade: 2–3 hours, mostly reading, math, and read-aloud time.
- 4th–6th grade: 3–4 hours, with independent work building.
- 7th–8th grade: 4–5 hours, more subject specialization.
- High school (9–12): 5–6 hours, working toward Carnegie units for transcripts.
How Montana's rule actually works
180 days per year, 720 hours (grades 1–3) or 1,080 hours (grades 4–12)
Because Montana expects you to document instruction, the simplest approach is to log the date, subject, and what you did. Don't try to count every minute — log sessions in 30-minute blocks.
What counts as an instructional hour?
Direct teaching, supervised work on assigned tasks, read-alouds tied to curriculum, math drills, science labs, history reading, foreign-language practice, P.E. with structured instruction, and educational field trips with a learning objective all count. Free play, screen time without educational intent, and routine chores generally don't count toward statutory hours.
Frequently asked questions
Does Montana count field trips toward homeschool hours?
Educational field trips with a documented learning objective generally count, especially museum visits, historical sites, and nature centers. Keep a one-line log entry per trip.
Can I homeschool four days a week in Montana?
Yes, as long as you hit the annual 900-hour requirement. Many Montana families homeschool four longer days and use Friday for co-ops, field trips, or testing.
How many hours is too many for elementary ages?
More than 4 hours of seated instruction at ages 6–9 typically produces diminishing returns and burnout. Quality matters more than seat time at this age.
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